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mike dixon conducting orchestra

Turn Around and Take a Bow

Leading musical director and TL alum Mike Dixon to publish book on life and career featuring fond memories of his conservatoire days

Musical Director, composer and arranger Mike Dixon studied piano at Trinity Laban (then Trinity College of Music) from 1975-1979.

Since graduating, he has enjoyed a successful career working extensively across theatre, TV, radio and live events. Credits include six Royal Variety Shows, Pop Idol and several West End productions such as We Will Rock You and Joseph and the Amazing Technicolor Dreamcoat.

Now he is reflecting on his life and four-decade career in new book Turn Around and Take a Bow, due to be published 28 June 2022.

The biography includes a chapter revisiting his studies at Trinity Laban, with references to “colourful friends, brilliant teachers and the endless musical adventure”.

Dixon shares an excerpt –

“I played with many singers over my four years at Trinity [Laban] but very early on found myself playing Brahms Four Serious Songs and Elgar’s Sea Pictures with an extraordinary contralto called Lucy Coleby.

“We were playing in the Lecture Theatre of Trinity [Laban] where the concert grand was a nine-foot Bösendorfer with the extra notes at the bottom covered by a little black flap, still one of my favourite pianos. It was one of the regular Wednesday afternoon concerts in front of our peers and some invited guests.

“One of the special guests was a lady in her eighties, Gladys Puttick, who had been one of the most innovative and forward-thinking teachers of her generation. A veritable ‘Nadia Boulanger’ of Trinity [Laban] and highly revered. In her youth she had seen Brahms play and I was somewhat stunned when she quietly came over to me after the concert and whispered that my playing was like hearing Brahms himself at the piano. Antony Lindsay standing beside me beamed with pride, his elegant coaching and patient advice had paid off.”

It promises to paint a vivid picture of life at Mandeville Place, the former home of the conservatoire before it’s relocation to Greenwich.

The autobiography will be available from Troubador publishing.

Errollyn Wallen headshot

Composition Professor in award-winning Venice Biennale Installation

Featuring Errollyn Wallen CBE, ‘Feeling Her Way’ has won the Golden Lion at the 59th International Art Exhibition

Sonia Boyce has made history as the first black artist to represent Britain at the Venice Art Biennale, the world’s longest-running and most high-profile international exhibition of contemporary art.

And now her multi-layered artwork for the British Pavilion has claimed the top prize at the 59th International Art Exhibition, making her the first British artist to win the award in almost 30 years.

Feeling Her Way combines video, collage, music and sculpture to focus on the vocal experimentation of five outstanding black female musicians as they embody feelings of power, freedom and vulnerability.

At the heart of the installation are filmed sessions recorded at London’s iconic Abbey Road studios.

Trinity Laban composition professor Errollyn Wallen CBE guides jazz singer Jacqui Dankworth, singer songwriters Poppy Ajudha and Tanita Tikaram, and experimental vocalist Sofia Jernberg through a series of exercises, inviting them to improvise and play with their voices in new ways.

Boyce wants to hear what happens when creative women are unconstrained by social expectations or market forces, by the demand that they behave themselves. So Wallen encourages the vocalists to use the voice as a vehicle of free expression, inviting them to make curious, disturbing, even ugly sounds: “You don’t have to make a nice sound”, she explains.

On being involved in the award-winning artwork, Wallen comments –

“I loved working with Sonia as I have long been an admirer of her work. Feeling Her Way captures the essence of being a musician and the devotion combined with attentive listening, which is central to this activity.”

Described by The Observer as a “renaissance woman of contemporary British music”, Wallen is central within Trinity Laban’s Composition department.

Two female dancers dressed in pink skirts and short sleeve shirts, one is lying on her side the other is kneeling bent over her

Trinity Laban at Resolution 2022

Dance students and alumni are taking part in The Place’s annual pick ‘n’ mix festival of live theatre

Resolution 2022 runs from Saturday 7 May to Friday 10 June at The Place theatre. It features over 66 artists premiering bite-size performances across 22 nights.

These include 2021 Trinity Laban Innovation Award Winners Tough Boys Dance Collective (Roseann Dendy, Sula Castle and Daze Hingorani-Short). The queer-led dance theatre trio will present DJ as Witness, a simmering collection of club snapshots developed as part of the award (Tue 24 May).

Sula and Daze are also performing alongside alum Andrea Callaghan in Miriam Levy’s I Can’t Work Under These Conditions, a show is about divas that takes a witty look at the intersections of confidence and gender expression (Tue 31 May).

Also showing work is Danish dance artist and emerging choreographer Laura Engholm, the recipient of the 2020 Innovation Award. Mentored by participatory dance artist and fellow alum Stella Howard, Laura used her Award to created dance company Engholm Danseteater, which places diversity and inclusion at the heart of its work. Stories of Belonging is a witty and thoughtful blend of contemporary dance, music, poetry and physical theatre, creating a living collage of stories about what it means to belong to a place, to a person, to a tribe, to yourself (Wed 11 May).

MA Choreography student Angelina Gorgaeva presents Three Sisters.Between the lines…, inspired by Anton Chekhov’s play Three Sisters and performed by contemporary dance students Igea Noioso, Anika Nowicka, Zuzanna Wasiak, Chiara Duccini and Gaia Tundo (Thu 12 May).

Other alumni presenting work are Alice Labant and Gordon Raeburn, whose Rebooted Facets is an eclectic patchwork driven by chance and the Hip Hop sampling process (Tue 17 May).

Pavlina Karlo’s duet Now & Then, performed by Kristyna Kocianova and Agnieszka Mencel, portrays two physical bodies in the expression of one person in a lived journey of loss and gain through an emotional trauma (Wed 18 May).

Kathryn Fisher and Laure Dubanet invite the audience into a quiet and tender space of queer desire as they perform Teresa Skamletz’s Wet Bit of Sand (Thu 19 May).

Follow Through Collective, featuring Natalie Richter and Johanna Merceron, access imagination and physical memories to perform Greta Gauhe’s Being at Hand (Mon 30 May).

Hannah Connor and Nadine Muncey present Landscape No. 8, a duet that explores serenity and connectivity (Wed 8 Jun).

Colleen Bartley and Beithe Movement Collective invite the audience to experience the unfolding exploration of movement, sound, space, bodies and objects in surface tension of the unknown (Thu 9 Jun).

For over 30 years Resolution has been a celebration of new choreography and performance works, spotlighting emerging artists and being a springboard into the profession.

To see the full programme and book tickets, visit The Place website.

Image: Teresa Skamletz’s Wet Bit of Sand (credit Cheniece Warner)

Rostrum of a narrow sawfish

Object in Focus 2022

Sawfish installed to inspire staff and students on the climate emergency

Object in Focus is an annual loans programme funded by Arts Council England which aims to improve access to the Horniman Museum and Gardens’ collections by sharing them with partner organisations.

For 2022, Trinity Laban is hosting a selection of 100-year-old sawfish specimens at the Faculty of Dance in Deptford. The installation will inspire our Learning and Participation programmes and the wider Trinity Laban community across summer term activities.

Sawfish are predators that belong to a unique group of fish called Chondrichthyes, which includes stingrays and sharks, and are special because their entire skeleton is made up of just cartilage.

Despite chondrichthyans having existed for over 400 million years, their survival is now threatened by climate change. Sawfish are found in tropical and subtropical areas, in shallow coastal wasters or estuaries – habitats that will be severely impacted by rising sea levels, caused by melting ice sheets and glaciers.

The Horniman’s Senior Curator of Natural Sciences Dr Emma Nicholls shares further insights about the sawfish in a short YouTube video.

Hosting and creatively responding to the Object in Focus forms part of our wider engagement with Lewisham’s year as London Borough of Culture, which includes a programme of talks, discussions, debates, and workshops to address local climate issues, as well as the global climate crisis.

Trinity Laban Project Manager Laura Woods comments –

“The annual Horniman Object in Focus heralds the start of Trinity Laban’s summer term and a busy period of creativity for our children, youth and adult programmes.  This year feels particularly special since our groups will be able to view the object in person and get involved with Lewisham Borough of Culture’s call to action.  Climate emergency is something that unites us all and I look forward to seeing how these themes inspire creativity within our Trinity Laban community.”

Sarah Sinka, Object in Focus Project Coordinator at the Horniman, comments –

“For this year’s loan, we not only looked at objects that would work well in the wonderful space in the Laban Building, but also a topic that ties into the Borough of Culture’s theme of the climate emergency. All five species of sawfish are likely to be impacted by climate change – as sea levels rise, their shallow water habitats are at risk of disappearing. I’m delighted that the Horniman has been given an opportunity to highlight the plight of these incredible animals, and look forward to seeing how the objects are interpreted by the groups this year.”

The Horniman’s Sawfish will be on display at the Laban Building until mid-July 2022.

Trinity Laban has collaborated with the Museum for over a decade. To find out more about the partnership, visit our Horniman page.

Image credit: Horniman Museum and Gardens.

Launching TL’s Summer Season 2022

Encounter intriguing and inventive music and dance in our live events programme. 

Running from May to July, our summer season takes Trinity Laban talent to venues across the capital to celebrate innovative new works and contemporary voices across artforms.  

Highlights include a new opera, two festivals, three musical theatre productions, a host of new dance works and a rousing call to climate action.  

Hope 4 Justice  

Co-created by composer Eska Mtungwazi, Young Person’s poet laureate Cecilia Knapp, choreographer Sarah Golding and hundreds of local young people, Hope 4 Justice will highlight global and local climate concerns and look to the future with hope. The cross-artform piece featuring dance, music and spoken word will be presented at Catford’s Mountsfield Park as part of Lewisham Borough of Culture 2022 in partnership with Lewisham Music. 

Dance 

An annual highlight, Dance Legends (Thu 30 Jun – Fri 1 Jul) features a selection of works by choreographers who have made significant contributions to the development of contemporary dance. This year’s programme includes Protima Chatterjee Unfettered Mind, Candoco’s Still by Nigel Charnock and experts from Studio Wayne McGregor Autobiography performed by second year students. 

This season also sees dance students from across our programmes present new work, starting with two programmes of original choreographic work by second-year BA (Hons) Contemporary Dance students Mon 9 May & Tue 10 May).  

Third year students will delight and intrigue audiences with theatre-based and site-specific dance works, films and installations for Dance in Situ (Wed 18 Jun) in a culmination of their artistic exploration and choreographic investigation, before presenting work which has been developed through intensive periods of creative exploration with professional choreographers including Diva Kasturi in the second instalment of Commissioned Works (Tue 14 Jul). 

Across two weeks, the Faculty of Dance presents the annual Graduate Showcase (Mon 18 – Fri 29 Jul), spotlighting new work from artists studying on our masters and research degree programmes. Expect experimental and investigative pieces, drawing on collaborative and interdisciplinary practices that incorporate live performance, film and video, installation, and documentary processes. 

Festivals 

Changemaker Festival at Blackheath Halls (Thu 26 – Fri 27 May) celebrates the diverse and rich work of our BA (Hons) Music Performance and Industry students. 

Curated by Douglas Finch, New Lights Contemporary Festival of Piano and Contemporary Music returns to our King Charles Court campus for a riot of experimental music making (Mon 20 & Tue 21 Jun). The festival has earned a reputation for showcasing a diverse range of composed and improvised contemporary music for keyboard, electronic and multi-media performance. Each day will feature a series of performances from students, alumni, composers and guest artists, and will culminate in an interactive improvisational ‘happening’ across multiple spaces. 

Continuing their successful UK Tour, Nic Pendlebury and Trinity Laban String Ensemble bring A Change of Season to Latitude Festival in Suffolk (Thu 21 & Fri 22 Jul). A response to the climate emergency, the programme reimagines Vivaldi’s iconic masterpiece The Four Seasons and revives Hollie Harding’s immersive and eco-political Melting, Shifting, Liquid World, exploring the seasons as they should be and contemplating what they may become. 

Productions 

In their last shows before transitioning into the profession, third year musical theatre students take to The Albany stage to present two movie-inspired shows: Carrie the Musical (Fri 20 May – Sat 21 May) and Footloose the Musical (Fri 27 – Sat 28 May).  

Based on the Stephen King novel Carrie with music by Michael Gore and Lyrics by dean Pitchford, the show centres on a teenage girl with telekinetic powers whose lonely life is dominated by an oppressive religious fanatic mother. When she is humiliated by her classmates at the high school prom things take a turn and chaos is unleashed on everyone and everything in her path. 

Based on the classic 1980s film, Footloose tells the story of city boy Ren who moves to a rural backwater in America where dancing is banned. He decides to break loose and soon has the whole town up on its feet. 

In June, it’s the turn of second year students who present Andrew Lippa’s heart-warming and magical Big Fish at Blackheath Halls (Mon 20 – Sat 25 Jun).  

Devised by Head of Vocal Studies Jennifer Hamilton, Strozzi! brings to life the intriguing world of seventeenth-century Venetian composer Barbara Strozzi in a collage of words and music (Thu 7 – Sat 9 Jul). 

Concerts and competitions 

Open to student ensembles across our Faculty of Music, the Carne Trust Chamber Competition showcases the technical and creative skill of our musicians. In the final, Beyond the Bell, Bolling Quartet, Meridian Guitar Quartet and Waldstein Quartet will compete at St John Smith Square for a share of the generous prize fund (Wed 22 Jun). 

Continuing our Black Culture 365 programme, composer and recitalist Althea Talbot-Howard presents the British premieres of original compositions and new realisations of music by Chevalier de Saint-Georges, Coleridge-Taylor, and Sancho at St Alfege (Thu 30 Jun). 

Trinity Laban Symphony Orchestra will take Cadogan Hall audiences on a tour of early twentieth century London through the eyes and ears of Vaughan Williams with ‘A London Symphony’ under the direction of Gerry Cornelius, before being joined by Soloists’ Competition 2022 winner Kyle Nash-Baker for Beethoven’s Piano Concerto No.3 (Tue 28 Jun). 

Trinity Laban’s Sinfonia Strings and Wind Ensembles come together at Blackheath Halls (Thu 12 May) to perform Handel’s Water Music, directed by Walter Reiter. 

To mark the end of another successful academic year, our junior departments will mount shows and presentations in July. Junior Trinity takes to the stage at Cadogan Hall for a concert and prizegiving ceremony (Sat 9 Jul), while Laban Theatre hosts the Centre for Advanced Training End of Year Show (Sat 9 Jul) and the annual summer show for participants from our Children’s Creative Dance Classes (Sat 2 Jul). 

 

For full listings, ticketing info and booking visit our What’s On page.  

TL Professors named top players by BBC

Leon Bosch and Chi-Chi Nwanoku feature in BBC Classical Music magazine’s list of the 10 best double bass players.

TL Professor Leon Bosch and Visiting Professor and Honorary Fellow Chi-Chi Nwanoku OBE, both feature in BBC Classical Music magazine’s list of the 10 best players who have helped to develop the role of the double bass as a solo and chamber instrument.

Throughout his diverse career as virtuoso player, conductor and broadcaster, Leon has been committed to rediscovering neglected music, as well as expanding and diversifying the double bass repertoire. He commissions chamber arrangements of well-known symphonic classics for his ensemble I Musicanti.

Chi-Chi is the Founder, Artistic and Executive Director of the Chineke! Foundation, which supports, inspires and encourages Black, Asian and ethnically diverse classical musicians working in the UK and Europe. Her range of musical interests have resulted in a broad career performing and recording in a diversity of styles from authentic baroque through to 21st century and new commissions.

The world-renowned performers are part of our exceptional roster of teaching staff inspiring students in our dynamic and innovative Strings Department.

Image: Leon Bosch (credit Juno Snowdon)

TL ranked 26th in the QS World University Rankings by Subject 2022

Trinity Laban has been named as one of the world’s top universities, according to the latest edition of the world’s most-consulted university ranking.

The conservatoire has risen to 26th for Performing Arts globally, scoring high in both Academic Reputation and Employer Reputation, and is ranked 51st in the world overall.

The annual QS World University Rankings portfolio has become the world’s most popular source of comparative data about university performance, being consulted over 147 million times on TopUniversities.com in 2021 and covered 96,000 times by media and institutions.

International higher education think-tank QS Quacquarelli Symonds is the world’s leading provider of services, analytics, and insight to the global higher education sector. For the twelfth edition of the QS World University Rankings by Subject, it ran an independent comparative analysis on the performance of 15,200 individual university programs, taken by students at 1543 universities in 88 locations across the world, across 51 academic disciplines.

View the full rankings.

Douglas finch sat at open lid grand piano

World premiere of new chamber opera by TL teacher

Take Care by piano professor Douglas Finch celebrates the remarkable work of carers

Trinity Laban piano professor and curator of New Lights Festival Douglas Finch has penned a brand-new chamber opera with librettist Cindy Oswin.

Telling the story of carer Katie’s and her clients, Take Care is based on extensive research into the working lives of those who care for people with dementia and features a chorus of twelve carers from the local community in Nottingham.

The elegant and direct narrative is supported by a complex yet accessible and empathetic score by Finch that has stylistic references ranging from Vaudeville to Wagner.

It premieres at Lakeside Arts Centre in Nottingham 2 April 2022, under the baton of Trinity Laban’s Head of Orchestra Studies Jonathan Tilbrook.

Take Care is supported by Arts Council/National Lottery and the ESRC Impact Accelerator Fund.

Five men and women with pained expressions and fingers in their ears

Anyone Can Sing

TL vocal tutor Sarah Pring mentors would-be singers for new Sky Arts show

International mezzo soprano Sarah Pring has been a part of Trinity Laban’s vibrant vocal department for the last eight years, whilst carving out a flourishing performance career singing with companies such as Scottish Opera and English National Opera.

At Trinity Laban, she brings her knowledge of the profession, practical advice and holistic approach to nurture students and help them develop their individual talents and find their own artistic voice.

Now, she’s turned her expertise to six of the UK and Ireland’s “worst singers”.

Working alongside Nicky Spence and Michael Harper, the world-class vocal coach has spent three intensive months transforming the vocal-stylings of participants from screeching in the shower to performing like a pro in a bid to prove that Anyone Can Sing.

On being part of the series, Sarah comments –

“It has been incredibly rewarding to open up the classical music space and empower our participants to discover their voices. Accessibility in the arts is so important – creativity and expression are for everyone. In three months I’ve seen how life-changing this process has been in terms of improving confidence and positively impacting general wellbeing.”

Before Anyone Can Sing Sarah worked with BBC Comic Relief, training comedians to sing operatically.

Watch the process from Wednesday 30 March on Sky Arts.

At Trinity Laban, we support our students’ personal development as versatile and curious musicians. To find out more, visit our vocal pages.

Trinity Laban launches THRIVE

A new programme of affordable professional development for early career dancers.

Geared to emerging professional freelance dance artists and those wishing to replenish their skills, THRIVE is Trinity Laban’s new professional development programme.

From April – August 2022 artists will be able to mix and match live, professional-level weekend intensives in dance techniques with business skills webinars and group discussions.

Covering everything from social media skills to managing a portfolio career, the online workshops are free to Lewisham locals, while the in-person classes have a three-tier pricing system to help overcome potential financial barriers.

The flexible programme can be done in full, or as one-off sessions, and is designed to help emerging creatives support their dance careers, sustain their practice and gain a peer network.

Presented by Trinity Laban, THRIVE is funded by Lewisham Council and produced by Clearcut.

Find out more and book 

Joe Townsend playing violin with bow raised accompanying two smiling contemporary dancers in motion

Trinity Laban professor named Inspirational Educator 2022

Joe Townsend receives Educators’ Trust Award in Music Education

Trinity Laban’s Head of BA Music Performance and Industry and Head of CoLab, Joe Townsend, has been recognised by The Worshipful Company of Educators for his outstanding innovation and excellence in educational practice.

Joe leads the Conservatoire’s ground-breaking artist development work that prepares students with the vital skills needed to both succeed in and shape the musical landscape.

Presented annually, the Inspirational Educator Award celebrates the impact of individual teachers in specific areas of focus. This year’s theme was Music Education.

On receiving the award, Joe comments –

“I’m deeply honoured and humbled to receive this award. Leading CoLab at Trinity Laban has shown me that sharing our individual stories together through making music and dance helps us understand how we learn, find new ways of expression, and, ultimately, bring light into challenging times.”

Director of Music Havilland Willshire, who nominated Joe, comments –

“Joe is one of the great innovators. Not only does he have the vision to draw disparate ideas together but also the ability to forge the relationships that are necessary to put these ideas into practice.

“This is truly inspirational work, and we are delighted that Trinity Laban has provided the environment through which Joe has been able to foster his ambitions for music education and that his work has been recognised by an Inspirational Educator Award from The Worshipful Company of Educators Trust.”

Initially a self-taught musician in the punk era, Joe later trained in Jazz on the violin at the Guildhall in the 1980s and then at Community Music with John Stevens, using improvisation as a tool for social change.

As well as being a cultural commentator, Joe regularly speaks at conferences on collaboration, pedagogy, audience development and social entrepreneurship. He consults on early career survival for emerging artists with Serious Productions, Help Musicians UK and English Folk Expo and running courses for the V&A Innovative Leadership Programme.

Founded in 2001, The Worshipful Company of Educators champions and supports the transformative power of education. It presents a programme of annual awards and bursaries for individual educators through its Educators’ Trust.

The prize will be presented at an Awards Dinner later this year.

Find out more about our world-leading teaching staff.